A
|
A.A. |
Augustinians of the Assumption
(Assumptionists) |
Ab. |
Abbot |
Abp. |
Archbishop |
A.C. |
Auditor Camerae (Auditor of
the Papal Treasury) |
A.J. |
Apostles of Jesus |
A.M. |
Artium Magister ("Master of
Arts") |
Ap Sed. Leg. |
Apostolicae Sedis Legatus
("Legate of the Apostolic See") |
Archiep. |
Archiepiscopus ("Archbishop")
|
Archid. |
Archidiaconus ("Archdeacon")
|
Archiprb. |
Archipresbyter ("Archpriest")
|
A.S.C. |
Adorers of the Blood of Christ |
A.S.C.J. |
Apostles of the Sacred Heart
of Jesus |
A.S.S.P. |
Angelic Sisters of St. Paul |
B
|
B. |
Clerica Regular of St. Paul (Barnabites) |
B.A. |
Order of Basilians of Aleppo
of the Melkites |
B.D. |
Bachelor of Divinity
|
B.F.C.C. |
Brothers for Christian
Community |
B.G.S. |
Little Brothers of the Good
Shepherd |
B. Se. |
Baccalaureus Scientiarum
("Bachelor of Sciences") |
B.U.J. |
Baccalaureus Utriusque Juris
("Bachelor of Both Laws" -- i.e., civil and canon) |
B.T. |
Baccalaureus Theologiae
("Bachelor of Theology") |
B.V.M. |
Sisters of Charity of the
Blessed Virgin Mary |
C
|
Ca,. Ap. |
Camera Apostolica ("Apostolic
Camera" -- i.e. Papal Treasury) |
C.C.D. |
Confraternity of Christian
Doctrine |
C.C.R. |
Congregation of Carmelite
Religious |
C.C.R.S.A. |
Congregation of the Clerics
Regular of Saint Augustine |
C.C.V.I. |
Sisters of Charity of the
Incarnate Word |
C.C.F. |
Congregation for the Doctrine
of Faith |
C.D.P. |
Sisters of Divine Providence |
C.F.A. |
Alexian Brothers |
C.F.C. |
Congregation of Christian
Brothers |
C.F.I.C. |
Congregation of Franciscans of
the Immaculate Conception |
C.F.R. |
Franciscan Friars of the
Renewal |
C.F.X. |
Congregation of Xaverian
Brothers |
C.I.C.M. |
Congregation of the Immaculate
Heart of Mary (Scheut Missions) |
C.H.M. |
Congregation of the Humility
of Mary |
C.J. |
Josephite Fathers |
C.J.D. |
Canons of Jesus the Lord |
C.J.M. |
Congregation of Jesus and Mary
|
C.M. |
Congregation of Priests of the
Mission (Vincentians or Lazarists) |
C.M.F. |
Missionary Sons of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary (Cordis Mariae Filius) (Claretians) |
C.M.I. |
Carmelites of Mary Immaculate |
C.M.M. |
Congregation of Marian Hill
Missionaries |
C.M.R.I. |
Congregation of Mary
Immaculate Queen (Congregatio Mariae Reginae Immaculatae) |
C.N.D. |
Congregation of Notre Dame |
C.O. |
Congregation of the Oratory (Oratorians) |
C.P. |
Congregation of the Passion (Passionists)
|
C.P.M. |
Congregation of the Fathers of
Mercy |
C.PP.S. |
Society of the Precious Blood
|
CPS |
Missionary Sisters of the
Precious Blood (Missionary Sisters of Mariannhill) |
C.R. |
Clerics Regular (Theatines) |
C.R. |
Congregation of the
Resurrection (Resurrectionists) |
C.R.I.C. |
Canons Regular of the
Immaculate Conception |
C.R.L. |
Canons Regular of the Lateran |
C.R.S. |
Clerics Regular of Somasca (Somascans) |
C.R.S.P. |
Clerics Regular of St. Paul |
C.S. |
Missionaries of St. Charles (Scalabrinians) |
C.S.B. |
Congregation of St. Bridget
|
C.S.B. |
Congregation of St. Basil (Basilians) |
C.S.C. |
Congregation of the Holy Cross
(Holy Cross Fathers) |
C.S.J. |
Congregation of St. Joseph |
C.S.J.P. |
Sisters of St John the Baptist
|
C.S.J.P. |
Sister of St. Joseph of Peace
|
C.S.P. |
Congregation of St. Paul (Paulists)
|
C.S.R. |
Sisters of the Holy Redeemer |
C.S.S. |
Stigmatine Fathers and
Brothers |
C.S.S.F. |
Congregation of Sisters Saint
Felice Cantalicio (Felicians) |
C.S.Sp. |
Congregation of the Holy
Spirit (Holy Ghost Fathers or Spiritans) |
C.Ss.R. |
Congregation of the Most Holy
Redeemer (Congregatio Sanctissimi Redemptoris) (Redemptorist)
|
C.S.V. |
Clerics of St. Viator (Viatorians)
|
C.V.I. |
Sisters of the Incarnate Word
and Blessed Sacrament |
D
|
D.C. |
Congregation of Fathers of
Christian Doctrine (Doctrinarians) |
D.C.L. |
Doctor Civilis [or Canonicae]
Legis ("Doctor of Civil [or Canon] Law") |
D.D. |
Doctor Divinitatis ("Doctor of
Divinity" -- i.e. Theology) |
D.H.M. |
Daughters of the Heart of Mary
|
D.H.S. |
Daughters of the Holy Spirit |
D.M. |
Daughters of Mary, Mother of
the Church |
D.M.S.E. |
Dominican Missionary Sisters
of St. Elizabeth |
D. Se. |
Doctor Scientiarum ("Doctor of
Sciences") |
D.S.M.P. |
Daughters of Saint Mary of
Providence |
D.W. |
Daughters of Wisdom (Filles de
la Sagesse) (Montfort Sisters) |
E
|
Er.Cam. |
Camaldolese Hermits of the
Congregation of Monte Corona |
F
|
F.C. |
Brothers of Charity |
F.C.J. |
Faithful Companion of Jesus,
Sisters |
F.D.C.C. |
Canossian Daughters of Charity |
F.D.N.S.C. |
Daughters of Our Lady of the
Sacred Heart |
F.D.P. |
Sons of Divine Providence |
F.F.S.C. |
Franciscan Brothers of the
Holy Cross |
F.I. |
Franciscans of the Immaculate |
F.I.C. |
Brothers of Christian
Instruction |
F.M.A. |
Daughters of Mary Help of
Christian (Salesian Sisters) |
F.M.I. |
Daughters of Mary Immaculate (Marianist
Sisters) |
F.M.M. |
Franciscan Missionaries of
Mary |
F.M.S. |
Marist Brothers |
F.M.S.I. |
Sons of Mary, Health of the
Sick |
F.P.O. |
Franciscans of Primitive
Observance |
F.S. |
Sisters of Our Lady of Fatima |
F.S.C. |
Brothers of the Christian
Schools (Christian Brothers or Lasallians) |
F.S.C.J. |
Sons of the Sacred Heart
(Verona Fathers) |
F.S.M. |
Franciscan Sisters of Mary |
F.S.P.A. |
Franciscan Sisters of
Perpetual Adoration |
F.S.S.J. |
Franciscan Sisters of St.
Joseph |
F.S.S.P. |
Priestly Fraternity of Saint
Peter (Fraternitas Sacerdotalis Sancti Petri) |
G
|
G.N.S.H. |
Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart
|
H |
H.M. |
Sisters of the Humility of
Mary |
I
|
I.B.V.M. |
Institute of the Blessed
Virgin Mary (Loreto Sisters) |
I.C. |
Institute of Charity (Rosminians)
|
I.C.M. |
Missionary Sisters of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary |
I.C.R.S.S.. |
Institute of Christ the King,
High Priest |
I.H.M. |
Sisters, Servants of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary |
I.M.C. |
Consolata Missionaries |
I.W.B.S. |
Sisters of the Incarnate Word
and Blessed Sacrament |
J
|
J.C.D. |
Juris Canonici Doctor, Juris
Civilis Doctor ("Doctor of Canon Law", "Doctor of Civil Law")
|
J..D. |
Juris Doctor ("Doctor of Civil
Law") |
J.SS.R. |
The Redemptorists Sisters of
Saint Joseph (Josephite Sisters) |
J.U.D. |
Juris Utriusque Doctor
("Doctor of Both Laws" -- Civil and Canon) |
J.U.L. |
Juris Utriusque Licentiatus
("Licentiate of Both Laws") |
|
K.G.H.S. |
Knight Grand Cross of the Holy
Sepulchre |
K.H.S. |
Knight of the Holy Sepulchre |
K.M. |
Knights of Malta |
K.P. |
Knight of Pius IX |
K.S.G. |
Knight of St. Gregory |
K.S.S. |
Knight of St. Sylvester |
L
|
L.B.S.F. |
Little Brothers of St. Francis |
L.C. |
Legionaires of Christ |
L.C.M. |
Sisters of the Little Company
of Mary |
L.H.D. |
Litterarum Humaniorum Doctor
("Doctor of Literature") |
LL.B. |
Legum Baccalaureus ("Bachelor
of Laws") |
LL.D. |
Legum Doctor ("Doctor of
Laws") |
LL.M. |
Legum Magister ("Master of
Laws") |
L.S.P. |
Little Sisters of the Poor |
|
M.A. |
Magister Artium ("Master of
Arts") |
M.Afr. |
Missionaries of Africa |
M.C. |
Missionaries of Charity |
M.C. |
Consolata Missionaries Sisters |
M.C.C.J. |
Comboni Missionaries of the
Heart of Jesus |
M.C.D.P. |
Missionary Catechists of
Divine Providence |
M.C.M. |
Cordi Marian Sisters |
M.C.S.T. |
Missionary Catechists of St.
Therese of the Child Jesus |
M.F.I.C. |
Missionary Franciscan of the
Immaculate Conception |
M.F.V.A. |
Franciscan Missionaries of the
Eternal Word |
Mgr. |
Monseigneur, Monsignore ("My
Lord") |
M.H.S.H. |
Mission Helpers of the Sacred
Heart |
M.I. |
Order of the Ministers of the
Sick (Camillians) |
M.I.C. |
Marian Clerics of the
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary |
M.J.C. |
Militia Jesu Christi (Militia
Christi, a Dominican Third Order) |
M.M.S. |
Medical Mission Sisters |
M.O.P. |
Missionaries of the Poor |
M.S. |
Missionaries of Our Lady of
LaSalette |
M.S.A. |
Missionaries of the Holy
Apostles |
M.S.B.T. |
Missionary Servants of the
Most Blessed Trinity |
M.S.C. |
Missionaries of the Sacred
Heart |
M.S.C.S. |
Scalabrian Missionary Sisiters |
M.S.F. |
Missionaries of the Holy
Family |
M.S.F.S. |
Missionaries of St. Francis de
Sales (Fransalians) |
M.S.S. |
Missionaries of the Blessed
Sacrament |
M.SS.C. |
Missionaries of the Sacred
Hearts of Jesus and Mary |
M.S.S.P. |
Missionary Society of Saint
Paul |
M.S.U. |
Congregation of Monks Studitas
of Ukraine |
M.T. |
Missionary Servants of the
Most Holy Trinity |
|
O.A.R. |
Order of Augustinian
Recollects |
O.C. |
Order of the Carmelites
|
O.CARM. |
Carmelites of Ancient
Observance |
O.Cart. |
Order of the Carthusians |
O.CIST. |
Cistercians (White Monks) |
O.C.D. |
Order of Discalced Carmelites |
O.C.S.O. |
Order of Cistercians of the
Strict Observance (Trappists and Trappistines) |
O.de.M. |
Order of Our Lady of Mercy (Mercedarians)
|
O.F.M. |
Order of Friars Minor
(Franciscans) |
O.F.M.Cap. |
Order of Friars Minor
Capuchins (Capuchins) |
O.F.M.Conv. |
Friars Minor Conventual (Conventual
Franciscans) |
O.F.M.I. |
Franciscan Friars of Mary
Immaculate |
O.F.M.Reg. |
Order of Friars Minor Regular |
O.H. |
Hospitallers Brothers of St.
John of God |
O.L.M. |
Order of Lebanese Maronite (Baladites) |
O.L.M.E. |
Our Lady's Missionaries of the
Eucharist |
O.L.V.M. |
Victory Noll Sisters
|
O.M. |
Minim Fathers |
O.M.C. |
Order of Merciful Christ
|
O.M.I. |
Oblates of Mary Immaculate
(Missionary Oblates) |
O.M.M. |
Work of Mary Mediatrix (Opus
Mariae Mediatricis) |
O.M.V. |
Oblates of the Virgin Mary
|
O.P. |
Order of Preachers (Ordo
Praedicatorum) (Dominicans) |
O.Praem. |
Canons Regular of Premontré (Norbertines
or Premonstratensian or White Canons) |
O.R.C. |
Order of Canons Regular of the
Holy Cross |
O.R.S.A. |
Augustinian Recollects
|
O.S. |
Oblates of Wisdom |
O.S.A. |
Order of St. Augustine
(Augustinians) |
O.S.A. |
Opus Sanctorum Angelorum |
O.S.B. |
Order of St. Benedict
|
O.S.B.M. |
Order of St. Basil the Great (Basilian
Order of St. Josaphat) |
O.S.C. |
Canons Regular of the Order of
the Holy Cross (Crosiers) |
O.S.Cam. |
Order of St. Camillus (Camillian
Fathers and Brothers) |
O.S.F. |
Congregation of Servants of
Holy Infancy Jesus |
O.S.F. |
Franciscan Brothers or Sisters |
O.S.F.N. |
Confederation of the Oratory
of Saint Philip of Neri (Oratorians) |
O.S.F.S. |
Oblates of St. Francis de
Sales |
O.S.F.S. |
Order of St. Francis--Secular
(3rd Order Franciscan) |
O.S.J. |
Oblates of St. Joseph
|
O.S.M. |
Order of the Servants of Mary
(Servites) |
O.S.P.P.E. |
Order of St. Paul the First
Hermit (Pauline Fathers) |
O.Ss.R.. |
Congregation of the Most Holy
Redeemer (Congregatio Sanctissimi Redemptoris) (Redemptoristines) |
O.Ss.S. |
Order of St. Savior (or Order
of Our Savior) (Ordo Ss. Salvatoris) (Brigittines) |
O.Ss.T. |
Order of the Holy Trinity
(Trinitarians) |
O.Ss.T. |
Third order secular of the
Most Holy Trinity |
O.S.T.R. |
Oblates of St. Therese
Reformed |
O.S.U. |
Order of St. Ursula (Ursulines) |
P
|
P.B.V.M. |
Sisters of the Presentation of
the Blessed Virgin Mary |
P.C.C. |
Poor Clare Collettines |
P.C.P.A. |
Poor Clares of Perpetual
Adoration |
Ph.B. |
Philosophiae Baccalaureus
("Bachelor of Philosophy") |
Ph.D. |
Philosophiae Doctor ("Doctor
of Philosophy") |
P.H.J.C. |
Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ |
P.M. |
Sisters of the Presentation of
Mary |
Prof. |
Professus, Professio,
Professor ("Professed", "Profession", "Professor") |
P.S.S. |
Society of Priests of Saint
Sulpice (Sulpitians) |
P.S.S.J. |
Poor Sisters of St. Joseph-Hermanas
|
|
R.A. |
Religious of the Assumption
|
R.C. |
Religious of the Cenacle
|
R.C.J |
Rogationists of the Sacred
Heart (Rogationists) |
R.D.C. |
Religious of Divine Compassion
|
R.G.S. |
Religious of the Good Shepherd |
R.J.M. |
Religious of Jesus and Mary
|
R.M.I. |
Religious of Mary Immaculate
|
R.N.D.M. |
Sisters of Our Lady of the
Missions (Religieuses de Notre Dame Missions) |
R.P. |
Reverendus Pater, Reverend
Pere ("Reverend Father") |
R.S.C. |
Religious Sisters of Charity
|
R.S.C.J. |
Religious of the Sacred Heart
of Jesus |
R.S.H.M. |
Religious of the Sacred Heart
of Mary |
R.S.M. |
Sisters of Mercy |
R.V.M. |
Religious of the Virgin Mary |
S
|
S.A. |
Society of the Atonement
(Franciscan Sisters/Brothers of the Atonement) |
S.A.C. |
Society of Catholic Apostolate
(Pallotines) |
S.B.S. |
Servants of the Blessed
Sacrament |
S.C. |
Brothers of the Sacred Heart |
S.C. |
Servants of Charity |
S.C. |
Sisters of the Cross |
S.C.C. |
Sisters of Christian Charity |
S.C.H. |
Sisters of Charity |
S.CH. |
Society of Christ |
SCH.P. |
Clerics Regular of the Pious
Schools (Piarist Fathers) |
S.C.I. |
Congregation of the Priests of
the Sacred Heart (Dohonians) |
S.C.J. |
Congregation of the Priests of
the Sacred Heart (Dehonians) |
S.C.S.J.A. |
Sisters of Charity of St. Joan
Antida |
S.D.B. |
Salesians of Don Bosco
|
S.D.S. |
Society of the Divine Savior (Salvatorians) |
S.D.V. |
Society of Divine Vocations (Vocationist
Fathers) |
S.F. |
Sons of the Holy Family
|
S.F.C.C. |
Sisters for Christian
Community |
S.F.O. |
Secular Franciscan Order |
S.G. |
Brothers of Saint Gabriel |
S.G.L. |
Servants of the Gospel of Life |
S.H.C.J. |
Society of the Holy Child
Jesus |
S.H.F. |
Sisters of the Holy Family |
S.H.Sp. |
Sisters of the Holy Spirit |
S.I.W. |
Sisters of the Incarnate Word
and Blessed Sacrament |
S.J. |
Society of Jesus (Societatis
Iesu) (Jesuits) |
S.J.C. |
Congrégation du Sacré-Coeur (Pčres
de Timon David) |
S.L. |
Sisters of Loreto |
S.M. |
Society of Mary (Marianists)
|
S.M. |
Society of Mary (Marists) |
S.M.A. |
Society of African Missions
|
S.M.I. |
Sisters of Mary Immaculate |
S.M.M. |
Missionaries of the Company of
Mary (Montfort Fathers) |
S.M.O.M. |
Sovereign Military Order of
Malta |
S.M.S.M. |
Marist Missionary Sister |
S.N.D. |
Sisters of Notre Dame |
S.N.DdeN. |
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur |
S.N.J.M. |
Sisters of the Holy Names of
Jesus and Mary |
S.O.Cist. |
Cistercians of the Common
Observance |
S.O.L.T. |
Society of Our Lady of Most
Holy Trinity |
S.P. |
Servants of the Holy Paraclete
(Piarist Fathers) |
S.P. |
Sisters of Providence |
S.P.S. |
St. Patricks Missionary
Society |
S.S. |
Society of St. Sulpice (the
Sulpicians) |
S.S.A. |
Sisters of St. Ann
|
S.S.C. |
Franciscan Servants of the
Sacred Heart |
SS.CC. |
Congregation of the Sacred
Hearts of Jesus and Mary (Picpus Fathers) |
S.S.Ch. |
Sisters of Sainte Chretienne |
S.S.C.J. |
Sister Servants of the Most
Sacred Heart of Jesus |
S.S.C.M. |
Servants of the Holy Heart of
Mary |
S.S.E. |
Society of St. Edmund (Edmundites) |
S.S.F. |
Society of St. Francis |
S.S.F.A. |
Sisters of the Holy Family
Associate |
S.S.I. |
Society of St. John (Societas
Sancti Ioannis) |
S.S.J. |
St. Joseph's Society of the
Sacred Heart (Josephites) |
S.S.J. |
Sisters of St. Joseph |
S.S.J. |
Society of St. John |
S.S.J. (T.O.S.F) |
Sisters of St. Joseph of the
Third Order of St. Francis |
S.S.J.C. |
Society of Saint John Cantius |
S.S.J.V. |
Society of Saint John Vianney |
S.S.M.I. |
Sister Servants of Mary
Immaculate |
S.S.M.N. |
Sisters of St. Mary of Namur |
S.S.M.O. |
Sisters of St. Mary of Oregon |
S.S.N.D. |
School Sisters of Notre Dame |
S.S.P. |
Society of St. Paul, Pauline
Fathers and Brothers |
S.Sp.S. |
Holy Spirit Missionary Sisters |
S.S.P.V. |
Society of St. Pius V
|
S.S.P.X. |
Society of St. Pius X
|
S.S.S. |
Congregation of the Blessed
Sacrament (Sacramentines) |
S.S.S.F. |
School Sisters of St. Francis |
S.Ss.T. |
Society of the Most Holy
Trinity (Trinitarians) |
S.T. |
Missionary Servants of Most
Holy Trinity |
S.T.B. |
Sacrae Theologiae Baccalaureus
("Bachelor of Sacred Theology") |
S.T.D. |
Sacred Theologiae Doctor
("Doctor of Sacred Theology") |
S.T.L. |
Sacrae Theologiae Licentiatus
("Licentiate of Sacred Theology") |
S.U. |
Sisters of St. Ursula |
S.V. |
Sisters of Life (Sorores
Vitae) |
S.V.D. |
Society of the Divine Word (Verbites)
|
S.X.
|
Xaverian Missionary Fathers (Xavierians)
|
|
T.O.R. |
Third Order Regular of St.
Francis |
T.O.S.F. |
Tertiary of Third Order of St.
Francis |
V
|
V.E. |
Verbo Encarnado |
V.S.C. |
Vincentian Sisters of Charity |
|
W.F. |
Missionaries of Our Lady of
Africa of Algeria, or Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers or Pčres
Blancs) Courtesy of
Apologia |
|
Luca Signorelli. The
Doctors of the Church. Fresco. 1499-1502. Orvieto Cathedral, San
Brizio Chapel, Orvieto, Italy
CATHOLIC TITLES AND THEIR
MEANING |
Patriarch |
The earlier patriarchs
are those who lived before the flood, and those who lived between that
event and the birth of Abraham. In the cases of some of them, a
difficulty is presented in their extraordinary longevity.
They are therefore
founders and chief men of a clan. Thus of the Semites from Adam to
Therah inclusively, there were nineteen patriarchs. With Abraham there
begins another list of patriarchs of the Abrahamites. First there are
the three great patriarchs, to whom all render special praise:
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Our Lord gives these three special honor.
Of Jacob sprang twelve sons, and twelve patriarchs, founders of the
race of Israel. In Acts, 2, 29 David is called a patriarch, as a token
of signal honor, and because he founded, the Davidic dynasty of which
is Christ.
|
Fathers |
Fathers
of the Church are saintly writers of the first centuries of the
Christian era, whom the Catholic Church acknowledges as witnesses of her
faith. To be numbered among the Fathers of the Church, four
qualities are required of write. First, you must have lived when
the Church was in her youth; hence St. Gregory the Great (d. 604) is
generally regarded as the last father in the West, St. John Damascene
(d.754), in the East.
Secondly, he must have
lived a saintly life. Thirdly, his writings must not only be free
from heresies, but also excel in the explanation and defense of Catholic
doctrine.
Lastly, his writings
must bear the seal of the Churches approval thou the majority of the
Fathers were bishops, yet this is not true of all of them. St.
Jerome was a simple priest to the end of his days, St. Ephraem a deacon,
St. Justin a layman.
All Fathers have not
been proclaimed doctors of the Church. In matters of faith and
moral, the consent of the Fathers has always been held in high esteem by
the Church. What they unanimously teach to be of faith, is of
faith; what they unanimously reject as heretical, is heretical.
Even the logical
conclusions which they unanimously draw from the articles of faith,
furnish us with a certain theological argument. Their authority is
due not only to the facts that they were saints or bishops or eminent
scholars and lived at a time when Christ's revelation was still fresh in
the minds of men, but primarily to the approbation of the Church.
But Christ said of the Apostles, "He that hearth you, hearth me," the
Church says in manner of the Fathers. They are the
mouthpiece of the infallible teaching of the Church, and the Church
acknowledges them as witnesses of her own faith. Hence, when
anathematizing new heresies or defining new dogmas, the Councils appeal
to the consent of the Fathers. The Council of Ephesus (in 431)
declared in its first session that it would define nothing save what had
been held unanimously by the ancient and holy Fathers. This
approbation of the Church gives added authority even to the Fathers,
considered singly thou in varying degrees period.
A general approbation
gives to a saintly writer of the first centuries implies that his
doctrine in general is orthodox and worthy of recommendation.
Sometimes, however, a certain Father's doctrine receives a special
approbation as being exceptionally solid; such is St. Augustine's
fundamental doctrine on grace.
Lastly, the highest
degree of ecclesiastical approbation is reached when the Church takes
the very doctrine of a Father and embodies it in her own official
pronouncements, as in the case of the St. Cyril of Alexandria, whose
twelve anathematisms against Nestorius were adopted by the Councils of
Ephesus (431). -C.E.; Agius, Tradition and the Church
The word Father
is used in the New Testament to mean a teacher of spiritual things, by
whose means the soul of man is born again into the likeness of Christ:
"For if you have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet not many
fathers. For in Christ Jesus, by the gospel, I have begotten you.
Wherefore I beseech you, be ye followers of me, as I also am of Christ"
(1 Corinthians 4:15, 16; cf. Galatians 4:19). The first teachers of
Christianity seem to be collectively spoken of as "the Fathers" (2 Peter
3:4).
Thus St. Irenaeus
defines that a teacher is a father, and a disciple is a son (iv, 41,2),
and so says Clement of Alexandria (Strom., I, i, 1). A bishop is
emphatically a "father in Christ", both because it was he, in early
times, who baptized all his flock, and because he is the chief teacher
of his church. But he is also regarded by the early Fathers, such as
Hegesippus, Irenaeus, and Tertullian as the recipient of the tradition
of his predecessors in the see, and consequently as the witness and
representative of the faith of his Church before Catholicity and the
world. Hence the expression "the Fathers" comes naturally to be applied
to the holy bishops of a preceding age, whether of the last generation
or further back, since they are the parents at whose knee the Church of
today was taught her belief. It is also applicable in an eminent way to
bishops sitting in council, "the Fathers of Nicaea", "the Fathers of
Trent". Thus Fathers have learnt from Fathers, and in the last resort
from the Apostles, who are sometimes called Fathers in this sense: "They
are your Fathers", says St. Leo, of the Princes of the Apostles,
speaking to the Romans; St. Hilary of Arles calls them sancti patres;
Clement of Alexandria says that his teachers, from Greece, Ionia, Coele-Syria,
Egypt, the Orient, Assyria, Palestine, respectively, had handed on to
him the tradition of blessed teaching from Peter, and James, and John,
and Paul, receiving it "as son from father".
It follows that,
as our own Fathers are the predecessors who have taught us, so the
Fathers of the whole Church are especially the earlier teachers, who
instructed her in the teaching of the Apostles, during her infancy and
first growth. It is difficult to define the first age of the Church, or
the age of the Fathers. It is a common habit to stop the study of the
early Church at the Council of Chalcedon in 451. "The Fathers" must
undoubtedly include, in the West, St. Gregory the Great (d. 604), and in
the East, St. John Damascene (d. about 754). It is frequently said that
St. Bernard (d. 1153) was the last of the Fathers, and Migne's "Patrologia
Latina" extends to Innocent III, halting only on the verge of the
thirteenth century, while his "Patrologia Graeca" goes as far as the
Council of Florence (1438-9). These limits are evidently too wide, It
will be best to consider that the great merit of St. Bernard as a writer
lies in his resemblance in style and matter to the greatest among the
Fathers, in spite of the difference of period. St. Isidore of Seville
(d. 636) and the Venerable Bede (d. 735) are to be classed among the
Fathers, but they may be said to have been born out of due time, as St.
Theodore the Studite was in the East.
|
The Fathers of the
Church
Alexander of Alexandria
[SAINT]
- Epistles
on the Arian Heresy and the Deposition of Arius
Alexander of Lycopolis
- Of
the Manicheans
Ambrose (340-397)
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- On
the Christian Faith (De fide)
- On
the Holy Spirit
- On
the Mysteries
- On
Repentance
- On
the Duties of the Clergy
- Concerning
Virgins
- Concerning
Widows
- On
the Death of Satyrus
- Memorial
of Symmachus
- Sermon
against Auxentius
- Letters
Aphrahat/Aphraates (c. 280-367)
- Demonstrations
Archelaus
- Acts
of the Disputation with the Heresiarch Manes
Aristides the Philosopher
- The
Apology
Arnobius
- Against
the Heathen
Athanasius
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Against
the Heathen
- On
the Incarnation of the Word
- Deposition
of Arius
- On
Luke 10:22 (Matthew 11:27)
- Circular
Letter
- Apologia
Contra Arianos
- De
Decretis
- De
Sententia Dionysii
- Vita
S. Antoni (Life of St. Anthony)
- Ad
Episcopus Aegypti et Libyae
- Apologia
ad Constantium
- Apologia
de Fuga
- Historia
Arianorum
- Four
Discourses Against the Arians
- De
Synodis
- Tomus
ad Antiochenos
- Ad
Afros Epistola Synodica
- Historia
Acephala
- Letters
Athenagoras
- A
Plea for the Christians
- The
Resurrection of the Dead
Augustine of Hippo
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Confessions
- Letters
- City
of God
- Christian
Doctrine
- On
the Holy Trinity
- The
Enchiridion
- On
the Catechising of the Uninstructed
- On
Faith and the Creed
- Concerning
Faith of Things Not Seen
- On
the Profit of Believing
- On
the Creed: A Sermon to Catechumens
- On
Continence
- On
the Good of Marriage
- On
Holy Virginity
- On
the Good of Widowhood
- On
Lying
- To
Consentius: Against Lying
- On
the Work of Monks
- On
Patience
- On
Care to be Had For the Dead
- On
the Morals of the Catholic Church
- On
the Morals of the Manichaeans
- On
Two Souls, Against the Manichaeans
- Acts
or Disputation Against Fortunatus the Manichaean
- Against
the Epistle of Manichaeus Called Fundamental
- Reply
to Faustus the Manichaean
- Concerning
the Nature of Good, Against the Manichaeans
- On
Baptism, Against the Donatists
- Answer
to Letters of Petilian, Bishop of Cirta
- Merits
and Remission of Sin, and Infant Baptism
- On
the Spirit and the Letter
- On
Nature and Grace
- On
Man's Perfection in Righteousness
- On
the Proceedings of Pelagius
- On
the Grace of Christ, and on Original Sin
- On
Marriage and Concupiscence
- On
the Soul and its Origin
- Against
Two Letters of the Pelagians
- On
Grace and Free Will
- On
Rebuke and Grace
- The
Predestination of the Saints/Gift of Perseverance
- Our
Lord's Sermon on the Mount
- The
Harmony of the Gospels
- Sermons
on Selected Lessons of the New Testament
- Tractates
on the Gospel of John
- Homilies
on the First Epistle of John
- Soliloquies
- The
Enarrations, or Expositions, on the Psalms
Bardesanes (154-222)
- The
Book of the Laws of Various Countries
Barnabas
[SAINT]
- Epistle
of Barnabas
Basil the Great
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- De
Spiritu Sancto
- Nine
Homilies of Hexaemeron
- Letters
Caius
- Fragments
Clement of Alexandria
- Who
is the Rich Man That Shall Be Saved?
- Exhortation
to the Heathen
- The
Instructor
- The
Stromata, or Miscellanies
- Fragments
Clement of Rome
[SAINT]
- First
Epistle
- Second
Epistle [SPURIOUS]
- Two
Epistles Concerning Virginity
[SPURIOUS]
- Recognitions
[SPURIOUS]
Commodianus
- Writings
Cyprian of Carthage
[SAINT]
- The
Life and Passion of Cyprian
- The
Epistles of Cyprian
- The
Treatises of Cyprian
- The
Seventh Council of Carthage
- Treatises
Attributed to Cyprian
Cyril of Jerusalem
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Catechetical
Lectures
Dionysius of Rome
[SAINT]
- Against
the Sabellians
Dionysius the Great
- Extant
Fragments
- Exegetical
Fragments
Ephraim the Syrian (306-373)
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Nisibene
Hymns
- Miscellaneous Hymns --
On the Nativity of Christ in the Flesh,
For the Feast of the Epiphany,
and
On the Faith ("The Pearl")
- Homilies --
On Our Lord,
On Admonition and Repentance,
and
On the Sinful Woman
Eusebius of Caesarea (c. 265-c. 340)
- Church
History
- Life
of Constantine
- Oration
of Constantine "to the Assembly of the Saints"
- Oration
in Praise of Constantine
- Letter
on the Council of Nicaea
Gennadius of Marseilles
- Illustrious
Men (Supplement to Jerome)
Gregory the Great, Pope (c. 540-604)
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Pastoral
Rule
- Register
of Letters
Gregory Nazianzen
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Orations
- Letters
Gregory of Nyssa
[SAINT]
- Against
Eunomius
- Answer
to Eunomius' Second Book
- On
the Holy Spirit (Against the Followers of Macedonius)
- On
the Holy Trinity, and of the Godhead of the Holy Spirit (To
Eustathius)
- On
"Not Three Gods" (To Ablabius)
- On
the Faith (To Simplicius)
- On
Virginity
- On
Infants' Early Deaths
- On
Pilgrimages
- On
the Making of Man
- On
the Soul and the Resurrection
- The
Great Catechism
- Funeral
Oration on Meletius
- On
the Baptism of Christ (Sermon for the Day of Lights)
- Letters
Gregory Thaumaturgus
[SAINT]
- A
Declaration of Faith
- A
Metaphrase of the Book of Ecclesiastes
- Canonical
Epistle
- The
Oration and Panegyric Addressed to Origen
- A
Sectional Confession of Faith
- On
the Trinity
- Twelve
Topics on the Faith
- On
the Subject of the Soul
- Four
Homilies
- On
All the Saints
- On
Matthew 6:22-23
Hermas
- The
Pastor (or "The Shepherd")
Hilary of Poitiers
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- On
the Councils, or the Faith of the Easterns
- On
the Trinity
- Homilies
on the Psalms
Hippolytus
[SAINT]
- The
Refutation of All Heresies
- The
Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus: Exegetical
- Expository
Treatise Against the Jews
- Against
Plato, On the Cause of the Universe
- Against
the Heresy of Noetus
- Discourse
on the Holy Theophany
- The
Antichrist
- Appendix
Ignatius of Antioch
[SAINT]
- Epistle
to the Ephesians
- Epistle
to the Magnesians
- Epistle
to the Trallians
- Epistle
to the Romans
- Epistle
to the Philadelphians
- Epistle
to the Smyraeans
- Epistle
to Polycarp
- The
Martyrdom of Ignatius
Irenaeus of Lyons
[SAINT]
- Adversus
haereses
- Fragments
from the Lost Writings of Irenaeus
Jerome
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Letters
- The
Perpetual Virginity of Blessed Mary
- To
Pammachius Against John of Jerusalem
- The
Dialogue Against the Luciferians
- The
Life of Malchus, the Captive Monk
- The
Life of S. Hilarion
- The
Life of Paulus the First Hermit
- Against
Jovinianus
- Against
Vigilantius
- Against
the Pelagians
- Preface
to the Chronicle of Eusebius
- De
Viris Illustribus (Illustrious Men)
- Apology
for himself against the Books of Rufinus
John of Damascus
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Exposition
of the Faith
John Cassian (c. 360-c. 435)
- Institutes
- Conferences
- On
the Incarnation of the Lord (Against Nestorius)
John Chrysostom
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Homilies
on the Gospel of St. Matthew
- Homilies
on Acts
- Homilies
on Romans
- Homilies
on First Corinthians
- Homilies
on Second Corinthians
- Homilies
on Ephesians
- Homilies
on Philippians
- Homilies
on Colossians
- Homilies
on First Thessalonians
- Homilies
on Second Thessalonians
- Homilies
on First Timothy
- Homilies
on Second Timothy
- Homilies
on Titus
- Homilies
on Philemon
- Commentary
on Galatians
- Homilies
on the Gospel of John
- Homilies
on the Epistle to the Hebrews
- Homilies
on the Statues
- No
One Can Harm the Man Who Does Not Injure Himself
- Two
Letters to Theodore After His Fall
- Letter
to a Young Widow
- Homily
on St. Ignatius
- Homily
on St. Babylas
- Homily
Concerning "Lowliness of Mind"
- Instructions
to Catechumens
- Three
Homilies on the Power of Satan
- Homily
on the Passage "Father, if it be possible . . ."
- Homily
on the Paralytic Lowered Through the Roof
- Homily
on the Passage "If your enemy hunger, feed him."
- Homily
Against Publishing the Errors of the Brethren
- First
Homily on Eutropius
- Second
Homily on Eutropius (After His Captivity)
- Four
Letters to Olympias
- Letter
to Some Priests of Antioch
- Correspondence
with Pope Innocent I
- On
the Priesthood
Julius Africanus
- Extant
Writings
Justin Martyr
[SAINT]
- First
Apology
- Second
Apology
- Dialogue
with Trypho
- Hortatory
Address to the Greeks
- On
the Sole Government of God
- Fragments
of the Lost Work on the Resurrection
- Miscellaneous
Fragments from Lost Writings
- Martyrdom
of Justin, Chariton, and other Roman Martyrs
- Discourse
to the Greeks
Lactantius
- The
Divine Institutes
- The
Epitome of the Divine Institutes
- On
the Anger of God
- On
the Workmanship of God
- Of
the Manner In Which the Persecutors Died
- Fragments
of Lactantius
- The
Phoenix
- A
Poem on the Passion of the Lord
Leo the Great, Pope (c. 395-461)
[SAINT] [DOCTOR]
- Sermons
- Letters
Malchion
- Extant
Writings
Mar Jacob
(452-521)
- Canticle
on Edessa
- Homily
on Habib the Martyr
- Homily
on Guria and Shamuna
Mathetes
- Epistle
to Diognetus
Methodius
- The
Banquet of the Ten Virgins
- Concerning
Free Will
- From
the Discourse on the Resurrection
- Fragments
- Oration
Concerning Simeon and Anna
- Oration
on the Psalms
- Three
Fragments from the Homily on the Cross and Passion of Christ
- Some
Other Fragments
Minucius Felix
- Octavius
Moses of Chorene (c. 400-c. 490)
- History
of Armenia
Novatian
- Treatise
Concerning the Trinity
- On
the Jewish Meats
Origen
- Origen
de Principiis
- Africanus
to Origen
- Origen
to Africanus
- Origen
to Gregory
- Origen
Against Celsus
- Letter
of Origen to Gregory
- Commentary
on the Gospel of John
- Commentary
on the Gospel of Matthew
Pamphilus
[SAINT]
- Extant
Writings
Papias
[SAINT]
- Fragments
Peter of Alexandria
[SAINT]
- The
Genuine Acts of Peter
- The
Canonical Epistle
- Fragments
Polycarp
[SAINT]
- Epistle
to the Philippians
- The
Martyrdom of Polycarp
Rufinus
- Apology
- Commentary
on the Apostles' Creed
- Prefaces
Socrates Scholasticus (c. 379-c. 450)
- Ecclesiastical
History
Sozomen (c. 375-c. 447)
- Ecclesiastical
History
Sulpitius Severus (c. 363-c. 420)
- On
the Life of St. Martin
- Letters --
Genuine and
Dubious
- Dialogues
- Sacred
History
Tatian
- Address
to the Greeks
- Fragments
- The
Diatessaron
Tertullian
- The
Apology
- On
Idolatry
- De
Spectaculis (The Shows)
- De
Corona (The Chaplet)
- To
Scapula
- Ad
Nationes
- (A
Fragment)
- An
Answer to the Jews
- The
Soul's Testimony
- A
Treatise on the Soul
- The
Prescription Against Heretics
- Against
Marcion
- Against
Hermogenes
- Against
the Valentinians
- On
the Flesh of Christ
- On
the Resurrection of the Flesh
- Against
Praxeas
- Scorpiace
- Appendix
(Against All Heresies)
- On
Repentance
- On
Baptism
- On
Prayer
- Ad
Martyras
- The
Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicity
(Sometimes attributed to Tertullian)
- Of
Patience
- On
the Pallium
- On
the Apparel of Women
- On
the Veiling of Virgins
- To
His Wife
- On
Exhortation to Chastity
- On
Monogamy
- On
Modesty
- On
Fasting
- De
Fuga in Persecutione
Theodoret
- Counter-Statements
to Cyril's 12 Anathemas against Nestorius
- Ecclesiastical
History
- Dialogues
("Eranistes" or "Polymorphus")
- Demonstrations
by Syllogism
- Letters
Theodotus
- Excerpts
Theophilus
- Theophilus
to Autolycus
Venantius
- Poem
on Easter
Victorinus
[SAINT]
- On
the Creation of the World
- Commentary
on the Apocalypse of the Blessed John
Vincent of Lérins (d. c. 450)
[SAINT]
- Commonitory
for the Antiquity and Universality of the Catholic Faith
|
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St. Thomas Aquinas surrounded
by the Doctors of the Church. |
Doctors |
Doctors of the Church, writers who received this title from the Church,
owing to their eminence in theology and holiness. They are extolled
by the Church not primarily as witnesses of her faith (as are the
Fathers), but on account of their brilliant exposition and skillful
defense of Catholic doctrine. Unlike the titles of Doctor
subtilis, or, Doctor resolutissimus, Doctor irrefragabilis, which
enthusiastic scholars of the Middle Ages bestowed on renowned professors,
this title is official. The first to confer it was Pope Boniface
VIII, who in the thirteenth century declared four Fathers the great
Doctors of the Latin Church: St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, St. Jerome, St.
Gregory the Great. The next to be declared to be a doctor was St.
Thomas Aquinas in 1567. Since then more than 20 renown theologians,
all of them canonized saints, have received the same seal of approval,
either from some pope or from the Sacred Congregation of Rites; the latest
are St. Peter Canisius and St. John of the Cross, who received this honor
from Pope Pius XI. Owing to their title, the Doctors of the Church
enjoy a special authority in the Church, thou not all in the same degree
or in the same manner. As a rule, the range and degree of their
authority are set forth in the degree by which the title is deferred.
Thus St. Alphonsus of Liguori is recommended to theologians as master of
moral theology, St. Jerome as biblical scholar, St. Bonaventure as eminent
and scholastic theology. Still, their writings are not thereby
pronounced infallible throughout, but they are proposed as safe guides, so
that their doctrines are to be preferred unless solid reasons favor the
opposite. - C.E.; Agius, Tradition and the Church
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